Posts Tagged ‘vegetable garden’
Tuesday’s Tip to Homesteading: Heirloom Seeds
If you’ve not been homesteading long or are just beginning, it may be tempting to go to your local farmer’s market and buy some of those nice, pest-resistant, hybrid plants that are supposedly easier to grow. After all, they are ‘made’ to be more user friendly right? Well, that depends.
They are often genetically modified plants (GMO) that have had artificial genes grafted into their make up to make them resist draught or blight or bugs. That’s why some tomatoes don’t really taste like a tomato. Not only that, but by being hybrids, they are sterile or infertile for next year’s seeds. The plant you grow this year will not produce seeds for next year’s garden. You get to go spend money again on another hybrid seed.
Heirloom seeds will give you seeds to use each year from the crops they grow. Eat them this year, dry and save some for next year. Repeat. Now that’s money in the bank!
Take a look at this place that offers heirloom seeds with fast, free shipping:
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Heirloom seeds by the lb.
We are planting only heirloom seeds this year and below is our starter list.
No hybrids and so all will produce seeds that reproduce thus starting out seed bank.
So, as the weather is cold and the mind is all that I can use to plant, here is our list for this year!
| 1 lb | Purple Majesty Potato | |
| 1 lb | Georgia Rattlesnake Watermelon | |
| 1 lb | Sugar Baby (Ice Box) Watermelon | |
| 1 lb | Pineapple Yellow Tomatoes | |
| 1lb | Mortgage Lifter Tomatoes | |
| 1lb | Cherokee Purple Tomatoes | |
| 1 lb | Delicious Red Tomatoes | |
| 1 lb | Big Rainbow Striped Tomatoes | |
| 1 lb | Yellow Plum Tomatoes | |
| 1 lb | Waltham Butternut Squash | |
| 1 lb | Zucchini Dark Green | |
| 1 lb | Bloomsdale Long Standing Spinach | |
| 1 lb | Small Sugar Pie Pumkins | |
| 1 lb | Cushaw White Pumpkin | |
| 1 lb | Baby Bear Pumpkins | |
| 1 lb | Sugar Snap Pole Edible Pod | |
| 1 lb | Little Marvel Shelling Peas | |
| 1lb | Walla Walla Onions | |
| 1 lb | Red Burgundy Onions | |
| 1 lb | Hale’s Best Jumbo Muskmelon | |
| 1lb | Honey Dew, Green Melon | |
| 1lb | Parris White Cos Romain Lettuce | |
| 1 lb | Iceberg Lettuce | |
| 1 lb | Black Beauty Eggplant | |
| 1 lb | Spacemaster Bush Cucumbers | |
| 1 lb | Parisian Pickling Cucumbers | |
| 1 lb | Peaches & Cream – Mid (Se) Corn | |
| 1 lb | Peaches & Cream – Early (Su) Corn | |
| 1 lb | Golden Bantam (8 row) Corn | |
| 1 lb | Stowell’s Evergreen White Corn | |
| 1 lb | Healthmaster Carrots | |
| 1lb | Savoy Drumhead Perfection Green Cabbage | |
| 1 lb | Mammoth Red Rock red Cabbage | |
| 2 lbs | Long Island Improved Brussel Sprouts | |
| 1 lb | Green Goliath Broccoli | |
| 1lb | Blue Lake Bush Beans | |
| 2 lbs | Purple Viking Potato | |
| 2 lbs | Desiree Potato | |
| 2 lbs |
Caribe Potato
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| 1lb | Early Summer Yellow Crookneck Squash |
How does your garden grow?
Anyone else dreaming of spring?
Gotta get to plowing!
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Vegetable Gardens Anywhere
In today’s difficult economy, a good garden is very important in homesteading. The time you spend in planning and working your garden, will be excellently rewarded. The article below will give you some great tips to gardening.
Planning your garden is one of the most important parts of vegetable gardening, and it’s quite simple. Whether its a vegetable garden, a flowerbed, indoor houseplants, or some combination, successful gardening requires planning, patience, and a little detective work. Whatever you do, do not choose garden soil, no matter how rich it might be, for indoor vegetable gardening! No matter what gardening zone your garden is located in there are catalogues with myriad variety of vegetables. Use these vegetable gardening tips to prepare your garden and keep your home full of fresh vegetables. Preparing your garden soil for planting is the most physically demanding part of vegetable gardening and may also be the most important part.
The patios and balconies of apartment buildings and condominiums often have good exposure for container vegetable gardening. Container gardening makes it possible to position the vegetables in areas where they can receive the best possible growing conditions. Container gardening can provide you with fresh vegetables as well as recreation and exercise. Although vegetable production will be limited by the number and the size of the containers, this form of gardening can be rewarding. Soilless mixes such as a peat-lite mix are generally too light for container vegetable gardening, since they usually will not support plant roots sufficiently. MEDIA A fairly lightweight potting mix is needed for container vegetable gardening. Soil Conditions The right type of soil for the right type of plant is key to successful vegetable gardening. Clay and sandy soils must be modified for successful vegetable gardening. Proper fertilization is another important key to successful vegetable gardening.
Buy seeds, seed starting kits and gardening supplies for vegetable gardens. If you are new to gardening, starting vegetables from seed may be too huge an undertaking, instead purchase plants. Practice crop rotation in your vegetable gardening by planting tomatoes and other vegetables in a different spot every year. Mulches can be used effectively in all types of gardening situations from vegetable gardens to flower gardens and even around trees and shrubs. I know an eyebrow or two might be raised at the suggestion of indoor vegetable gardening, but it can be done, within limits.
Added to the pleasure of gardening will be the satisfaction derived from relishing vegetables freshly picked from your very own plot. Learning is a process, vegetable gardening needs time. As in so many other pursuits, so it is in the art of vegetable gardening: practice does make perfect.
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